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Immunotherapies in Genitourinary Oncology: Where Are We Now? Where Are We Going?

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CANCERS
卷 13, 期 20, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13205065

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immunotherapy; immune checkpoint inhibitor; bladder cancer; urothelial cancer; kidney cancer; renal cell carcinoma; prostate cancer; testicular cancer; penile cancer; adrenocortical carcinoma

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Genitourinary malignancies encompass various cancers along the urinary and male reproductive tracts. Traditional immunotherapies have shown success in treating certain types of these cancers, while immune checkpoint inhibitors have emerged as a more precise method to enhance the immune system's ability to fight tumor cells. Despite promising data from clinical trials, there is still limited understanding of biomarkers that can predict response to these inhibitors, and the efficacy of ICIs varies across different tumor types in the genitourinary system.
Simple Summary: Genitourinary malignancies include cancers along the urinary tract and the male reproductive tract, encompassing the adrenal glands, kidneys, bladder, prostate, and testicles. Immunotherapy, which treats cancer by using the immune system to attack malignant cells, has historically been successful in treating some types of genitourinary cancers, especially of the bladder and kidney. In the past decade, a more precise method of immunotherapy, known as immune checkpoint inhibition, has gained popularity as it enhances the immune system's ability to recognize and destroy tumor cells. Several immune checkpoint inhibitors have achieved success in patients with advanced genitourinary cancers. This review provides a brief overview of traditional immunotherapies, focuses on how immune checkpoint inhibitors have achieved success in patients with advanced cancers, and investigates the role for immunotherapy in genitourinary malignancies in the future. For decades, limited options existed to treat metastatic genitourinary cancers, including treatment options that could be classified as immunotherapy. Historically, immunotherapy centered on systemic cytokines for the treatment of metastatic kidney cancer, which had several adverse effects, as well as the Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccine for non-metastatic bladder cancer. Within the past decade, advances in immunotherapy have led to several approvals from the United States Food and Drug Administration, particularly in the field of immune checkpoint inhibition. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) are now being used extensively to treat multiple solid tumors, including kidney and bladder cancers, and they are also being tested in many other cancers. Despite encouraging data from phase 2/3 clinical trials, less is known about biomarkers that may predict better response to ICIs. The effect of ICIs in genitourinary cancers is heterogeneous, with some tumor types having little clinical data available, or ICIs having limited activity in other tumors. In this review, we briefly discuss approved immunotherapy agents prior to the time of ICIs. Then, given the emergence of this class of agents, we summarize the several important ICIs and the clinical trials that led to their approval. Finally, we mention ongoing and future clinical trials.

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